Nvidia is bringing ray tracing to more classic PC titles
Starting with 'a title that you know and love'
Earlier this year, Nvidia's Lightspeed Studios revitalized a classic by giving id Software's seminal first-person shooter Quake II an RTX-enabled makeover. This effectively granted a 20-year-old title the power to bring modern gaming PCs to their knees when played at high resolutions.
Now, the studio is planning to remaster a number of other beloved PC titles in the same fashion, according to a new job listing that was spotted by DSOGaming.
- Nvidia thinks you’d be crazy to buy a graphics card without ray tracing in 2019
- Call of Duty: Modern Warfare will support ray tracing with Nvidia’s RTX GPUs
"We’re cherry-picking some of the greatest titles from the past decades and bringing them into the ray tracing age, giving them state-of-the-art visuals while keeping the gameplay that made them great," said Nvidia's job description.
So far, the studio has not offered any hints on which games will be brought into the ray tracing era, though the job description teases "a title that you know and love" as its starting point.
What is ray tracing?
Described as one of the most significant advancements in graphics technology, ray tracing allows games to portray incredibly realistic lighting, shadows and reflections.
One drawback to ray tracing is that it requires an incredible amount of computing power in order to achieve its complex lighting calculations. You'll also need a video card that supports ray tracing, such as Nvidia's range of RTX graphics cards. Current AMD cards support ray tracing via DirectX 12, although without dedicated hardware are unlikely to outperform Nvidia's RTX cards.
To give you an idea of how the technology affects gaming performance, we've tested ray tracing in Control on PC with every Nvidia RTX Super card.
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Stephen primarily covers phones and entertainment for TechRadar's Australian team, and has written professionally across the categories of tech, film, television and gaming in both print and online for over a decade. He's obsessed with smartphones, televisions, consoles and gaming PCs, and has a deep-seated desire to consume all forms of media at the highest quality possible.
He's also likely to talk a person’s ear off at the mere mention of Android, cats, retro sneaker releases, travelling and physical media, such as vinyl and boutique Blu-ray releases. Right now, he's most excited about QD-OLED technology, The Batman and Hellblade 2: Senua's Saga.